Monday, December 28, 2009 - 1:40 PM
For the vast majority of Pakistan's history, its politics
have been an elite-led phenomenon. There have been three actors in which have
been of prime importance: the military, the land-owning feudal classes, and the
business-owning industrialist classes. Representatives of each have controlled Pakistan at
various times, and at other times battled each other for power. But the
fundamental point would be that each of them remained institutionally divorced
from the issues and concerns of, on the one hand, the professional and middle
classes in urban centers, and on the other, the rural poor. Lip-service to
their demands was paid, to be sure, but little was done substantively to
advance their cause.
This state of affairs did not prove terribly problematic for the ruling
classes. Indeed, why would it? The military, by definition, was not accountable
to electoral politics. The country's dominant political parties, safely
ensconced in the knowledge of secure ethnic-based vote banks, could hardly be
characterized as overly concerned with the so-called common man either. In
short, Pakistan
witnessed regime after regime of accountability-free rule, in all senses of the
term.
Where this divide, between the government and the governed, was most stark was
in the realm of foreign affairs. Whether it was fighting wars, instigating
guerrilla campaigns in neighboring states, signing deals and treaties in
foreign capitals, joining international organizations or whatever, Pakistan's
leaders conducted business without any real input from its public.
In the last decade, this picture has changed dramatically due to three central
factors.
The first and most important factor is the explosion of private electronic
media. In the 1990s, it was difficult for most Pakistanis -- the vast majority
of which cannot or do not read newspapers -- to get information that was not
government-sponsored or, less mildly, propagandistic. The BBC, both on
television and on the radio, did a fair job of covering the truly major events
in Pakistan,
but like most foreign news agencies, it was obviously not concerned with the
nitty-gritty politics of daily life. As such, governments could control the
tenor and direction of the dominant political debates of the day. This is not
to suggest that they enjoyed a hassle-free existence, but to posit that those
hassles came from other elites, not from below.
This picture has changed drastically, as anyone with even a cursory interest in
Pakistan
will be able to tell you. There are now dozens of news channels in Pakistan, each
with their own ideological and partisan bent. Some are national-level, others
more regionally and ethnically focused. The trend began in the early part of
this decade and has plateaued only recently, as the market gets sated. And
while few of these channels will win awards for calm understatement or
presciently sedate analysis, the fact remains that the media -- if it can be
spoken of as a collective -- has given voice to a mass of the population
previously unheard from. It has become a player of truly monumental importance
for its ability to shape, mold, and excite the public. It is, at once,
sensationalistic, blood-thirsty, xenophobic, conspiratorial, humorous,
investigative, and anti-government. And yet its arrival on the scene is more
than welcome, first for providing the venue for disenfranchised interests to
make themselves known and second because the alternative is much worse.
The second significant factor, related to but distinct from the first, is the
rise of communication technologies in Pakistan, particularly cellular
phones. In 2002, there were 1.2 million cell-phone subscriptions in the
country. By 2008, this
number had risen to 88 million -- an increase of more than seven thousand
percent. In addition, more than one in ten Pakistanis had access to the internet
by the end of the decade; low by advanced countries' standards but an
astronomical rise by Pakistan's.
These developments in communications meant that political narratives became
congealed and disseminated at speeds never heard of before, and that
information and the wider "war" for public opinion became incredibly
hard to win if a battle was lost at any stage.
The third major factor is the economic growth that took place in Pakistan in the
first half of the 2000s. Pakistan's
GDP
doubled between 1999 and 2007, and more than kept pace with population
growth, as GDP
per capita increased by almost sixty percent between 2000 and 2008. More to
the point, this growth was overwhelmingly powered by expansion of the service
sector, which is concentrated, quite naturally, in the urban centers of the
country. For the first time since independence, the term "Pakistani urban
middle class" was not a contradiction in terms.
This development had two effects. First, and more trivially, the urban middle
class did what urban middle classes do: they bought televisions and computers.
In turn, that allowed them to plug into the private media explosion in ways
simply unimaginable previously. Second, it shattered the elite-only edifice of
Pakistani politics, and made challenges to government based on Main Street issues
-- the price of flour, the lack of electricity, the selective application of
the rule of law -- a viable process. Fifty years ago, Seymour Lipset wrote one of the canonical articles in
Political Science on the process of democratization, its relationship to
urbanized middle classes, and how the demands and values of the latter lead
almost inexorably to support for the former. Here was living proof of Lipset's
analysis.
What these factors -- private media, communication technologies, and the birth
of a viable (but still small) middle class -- meant in conjunction was that
political currents would now be affected by, and not merely find a sponge-like
audience in, a new non-elite movement.
Many writers, quite fairly and accurately, have chosen to focus on the merits
of this movement, by focusing, for instance, on its role in assuring that
Presidents Musharraf and Zardari's attempts to sideline Chief Justice Chaudhary
would be unsuccessful, or in unyielding efforts aimed at removing Musharraf
from office. But what often goes unsaid is that this new political actor has
destructive tendencies too, and it is in foreign affairs where this is made
most apparent. Why? For the simple reason that foreign policy is the one area
where the expectations of Pakistan's population concerning its leaders to speak
for it on the one hand, and the capabilities of Pakistan's leaders to deliver
on the other, are most conducive to clashing.
On the domestic front, Pakistan's
turn to mass politics has been attendant with a rising nationalism and a
suspicion of other countries, most notably but not limited to the U.S. and India, bordering on the
pathological. While half-baked conspiracy theories and a reflexive defensiveness
used to be the sole purview of the military establishment, these ideas now find
currency amongst the wider population. The country as a whole is without the
slightest smidgen of a doubt more right-wing and xenophobic than it was ten
years ago. And while there are moderately strong winds based on reason and
evidence that fan the flames of this discontent -- the revelations
of Blackwater operating in the country, along with the increasingly
cavalier approach of the U.S. with respect to action in Balochistan amongst
them -- most of these opinions are flatly nonsensical: the notion of a joint
Israel-India-U.S. axis to destroy Pakistan and redraw its boundaries, and the
idea that terrorist incidents in Pakistan are plotted by Indian intelligence
agents, to name just two of many.
This increasing distrust of foreign actors and their designs for Pakistan is reflected in great anger at any
cooperation with said foreign actors, specifically the U.S. But this
is where the bind that Pakistan's
leaders find themselves in becomes clear. If Pakistani leaders would be best
served domestically by bowing to the wishes of its people, and living a more
isolationist existence, why don't they? Why don't they simply follow the
dictates of the so-called median voter?
The short answer is simple: because they cannot. Thucydides, as all students in
an introductory courses in International Relations are told, famously said that
the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must. Pakistan's
macroeconomic indicators fell off a clip following the surge in oil prices in 2007
and the financial collapse in 2008. It has witnessed a period of great
political upheaval from March 2007 to the present. Its military is unable, at
least at present, to meaningfully
impact the extent to which militant groups can attack and kill innocent
civilians. In short, it is in no position to dictate terms to outsiders.
Here, then, we have a quandary: the nationalist public wants its leaders to be
brash and uncompromising. But leaders find that, once in office, they are in no
position to do so. Domestic political demands cede to international political
imperatives. This Catch-22 was made most apparent during the wholly inane
furor over the Kerry-Lugar bill, where the Pakistani public was, in effect,
being indignant at the insult of being handed seven and a half billion dollars.
The government was accused of selling out the country and its people; the
reality that aid-acceptors are not usually able to put their foot down on the
precise ways in which the money is delivered scarcely registered.
Or consider this piece of evidence: Asif Zardari and Pervez Musharraf have
almost nothing in common, save for the fact that they attended the same high
school (St.Patrick's, for the Karachiites in the audience). The former is from
a feudal family in Sindh, the latter a middle class family in Karachi. The former is a businessman and
politician, the latter a general. The former never garnered the trust of the
military-bureaucratic establishment in Pakistan, the latter is the
establishment (or was). The former gained power by being married to the late
Benazir Bhutto and inheriting (literally) the largest political party in the
country, the latter by launching a coup, and relying on the military as an
unshakable base of power. Their styles of leadership are starkly dissimilar
too; Zardari stays out of the limelight as much as possible, and engages in
backdoor deal-making, Musharraf was gung-ho and confrontational. And yet,
despite all these differences, they share one all-important trait: the
regularity with which they are and were accused of being traitorous, and
disloyal to Pakistan's
national interests.
The underlying reasons for that accusation, I hope, are obvious: despite their
many differences, they shared the same set of constraints, falling prey to the
clashing forces of domestic nationalism and international helplessness that
would befall any Pakistani leader in the current climate. And yes, Nawaz
Sharif, that means you too --if it comes to that. The simple fact is that this
trend is unlikely to abate any time soon. On the one hand, vicious nationalism
is a notoriously sticky phenomenon. On the other hand, Pakistan's bargaining
position on the international table is unlikely to improve enough in the
short-term whereby its leaders will be able to "just say no" on the
issues which are most costly with respect to their domestic political
interests.
As such we should, if I am correct, see the tension between these competing
pressures on Pakistan's
leaders continue, and challenge even the most adroit and strategic of leaders.
The obvious solution -- easier said than done, it must be conceded -- is to
gain cache with the population with sound governance, so that the public can at
least weigh the benefits of higher standards of living against the demerits of
purported treachery and disloyalty. Indeed, it is striking that Musharraf
enjoyed excellent approval ratings from the Pakistani public, well above 60
percent, until he took on the Chief Justice in March, 2007 (see p.39 of this
report). Ironically, given my analysis, Musharraf never suffered for his
international "mistake" to ally with the U.S. until he compounded it with
one on the domestic front.
The lesson, then, is that Pakistani leaders do have some room for error with
the Pakistani public, but not a great deal, and certainly less than their
predecessors.
India IS the issue.
Who the onus is on to alter their thinking is also debatable. There is no politician at present, nor one in Pakistan's history, that can square the rising xenophobic nationalism with ever-more pressure to cooperate with foreign allies on Afghanistan and the Taliban. The two are mutually exclusive.
Call it conspiratorial, but India's designs on weakening Pakistan by fueling the flames of domestic ethnic unrest are a tenet of faith with most Pakistanis.
Pakistan is a country founded on religion, but like the rest of the muslim world, it continually experiences shia-sunni violence. According to the cold calculation of Pakistani leaders, religion is the only glue that can hold the country together. If Pakistan did not emphasize its islamic heritage, the different ethnic groups would tear the country apart in no time at all.
The secondary glue holding Pakistan together is an absurd hatred of India. A country founded on religion and xenophobia will not last, and personally, I would bet money that the state collapses by the end of this century. The terrorists that Pakistan has supported for the past 30 years to bleed Indian-administered Kashmir are mostly Arabs. Pakistanis themselves long distanced themselves from the necessary carnage that these terrorists employ. When I see the news reports of today, where Pakistan constantly loses hundreds of civilian and military lives due to terrorism, I cannot help but feel satisfied. When you play with fire, you will get burned. And Pakistan truly deserves to burn for its contributions to the world stage.
The solution for India is to leave Pakistan alone and let it implode. If the Pakistanis continue to fuel terrorism in Kashmir, then India should indeed start supporting separatist groups within Pakistan to wreck their own damage. Pakistan needs to understand consequences for its actions. This is not necessary, however, as India will eventually flourish into a stable democracy with a powerful economy, while Pakistan will crumble under the weight of constant war with a far larger enemy.
Like the USSR, containment should be the goal for India. When Pakistan escalates terrorism, India should respond. But the real goal is to develop a strong economy, and along with it, a strong military. And when Pakistan finally does crumble, without any foreign military intervention, the territory can be rejoined with India in a democracy, as it always should have been. Creating states with religious identities is a recipe for failure, and Pakistan is no exception.
Economic growth in Pakistan over the last decade
Re: "The third major factor is the economic growth that took place in Pakistan in the first half of the 2000s. Pakistan's GDP doubled between 1999 and 2007, and more than kept pace with population growth, as GDP per capita increased by almost sixty percent between 2000 and 2008."
This is true of the figures cited but at current prices. At constant prices (in which growth is conventionally reported, to avoid taking credit for inflation) quite a different picture emerges from official figures. From 1999-2000 to 2000-2007, GDP in rupees increased by 45% (or 5.5% per year, on average). From 1999-2000 to 2007-2008, real GNP per capita rose from Rs 27,470 to Rs 35,245, an increase of 28% (or 3.2% per year, on average).
Finally, economists in Pakistan have expressed doubts over the authenticity of official statistics during the Musharraf-Zardari era, and it is widely believed that investment and growth stalled during this period, per capita income stagnated, and inequalities widened very substantially.
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